Prince Philip announces his return to royal enagements

August 04, 2013 - 13:25 CESTby hellomagazine.comPrince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, is set to return to royal duties when he visits the Royal Society of Edinburgh on 12 August before heading to Balmoral to join the Queen for their summer holiday

The Duke of Edinburgh is set to return to his royal duties in a week's time. Prince Philip, who has not been seen in public for two months, will travel to Edinburgh on 12 August to present medals at the Royal Society of Edinburgh, of which he has been an honorary fellow since 1951.

"He is continuing to make good progress and is in very good spirits," said a royal source. "He is doing this engagement because it is something he has been committed to for a very long time, as well as it being something he takes extremely seriously."

Buckingham Palace have said that the 92-year-old Duke, who is Britain's longest serving royal consort, will present medals to Professor Sir John Cadogan, the former head of research at BP, Professor Mike Ferguson, dean of Research in Life Sciences at Dundee University, and Sir Ian Wood, who is the former chairman of the oil and gas services company Wood Group, who are based in Aberdeen.

The Royal Society of Edinburgh is one of Prince Philip's oldest patronages and he has presented the royal medals there several times in the past.

After his engagement on Monday the Duke will travel to Balmoral where he will be reunited with the Queen, who is currently on holiday there.

While he is at Balmoral, Philip is expected to meet his third great-grandchild Prince George of Cambridge for the first time, when Prince William and Kate Middleton visit the royal family.

Prince Philip, who has been recuperating at Windsor Castle and Sandringham since undergoing abdominal surgery on 6 June, is expected to stay at Balmoral until October, when he will return to London.

As a result of his surgery the Duke of Edinburgh was forced to miss the Queen's official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour, Royal Ascot and the Garter Service at Windsor, but the royal family were quick to rally around him with many of them visiting him while he was in hospital and at the royal residences.

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